The present invention relates to equipment for use in industrial laundries, in particular to an improved industrial folding device for length-wise and cross-wise folding of cloth pieces.
An example of a prior art industrial folding device is disclosed in EP-A-2014798031. Where such industrial folding devices are to perform also a cross-wise folding in addition to a length-wise folding of the laundered cloth pieces, possibly with a subsequent stacking of the folded cloth pieces the prior art industrial folding devices generally take up a large floor area of the industrial laundry facility.
The object of the present invention is to solve problems associated with prior art folding devices as defined in the preamble of claim 1, by allowing for length-wise and cross-wise folding, as well as any stacking operations, to be performed with a relatively low footprint of the folding device.
In view of this object, a folding device as further defined in the characterising clause of claim 1 is provided.
In one embodiment, in a housing part for cross-folding there is a first frame carrying a first secondary linen sheet conveyor loop and/or a second frame carrying a second secondary linen sheet loop are movably, such as pivotally, supported, the folding device being configured for releasably maintaining the first and second frame in a position close to one another and for releasably maintaining, such as by a releasable lock, such as a latch, the first and second frames in positions distant from each other. This allows an operator easy access for removing linen sheets that for some reason have become stock inside the housing part.
In another embodiment, the folding device may allow for simultaneous processing of several cloth pieces introduced along-side each other with their leading edges being offset or not relative to one another, by providing several length-wise folding station across a width of the folding device and being controlled to act in sync or out of sync relative to one another. A claim is directed towards a method of using the device of that embodiment, comprising activating the length-wise folding stations in sync or out of sync relative to one another and/or, for each folding station, activating movement of a folding blade and/or air blast nozzles to provide an air blast for length-wise folding a linen sheet.
In yet another embodiment the folder device has one or more folded linen sheet stacker modules for stacking the folded linen sheets being positioned below folding stations performing a length-wise folding, and a stacker conveyor for advancing the folded linen sheets to the stacker modules, the aforementioned housing part of the folding device being located on a floor area next to that where the length-wise folding takes place.
As a further result of the invention, in one embodiment the folding device may allow for a person to perform maintenance while standing upright or substantially upright in a convenient working position.
As the skilled person will understand, the folding device of the present invention, to be discussed in the following, may provide overall benefits to the operation of any industrial laundry installation, irrespectively of the type of processing equipment placed upstream of the folder; this will apply equally where the present folding device replaces a worn out folder in an existing installation, and where the present folding device is supplied as a part of a new industrial laundry installation. Certain embodiments of the present folder may provide particular benefits where operated in connection with an ironer with rollers followed by a burner positioned immediately upstream of the present folder, in addition to other benefits relating to the ease of removing from the present folder cloth pieces that have caused an interruption of the folding process and, hence, delays in the processing of cloth pieces in the entire laundry installation.
For simplicity, in the following laundered cloth pieces/flat textile material pieces, such as table covers, bedcovers, pillowcases and towels, will be referred to generally as linen sheets. The present invention is useful for folding such linen sheets as desired, irrespectively of their shape, eg. irrespectively of the linen sheets being round, rectangular or square in shape. Several folds may be formed parallel with and/or perpendicularly to an edge of each rectangular or square linen sheet.
Additional advantages and problem solutions defined inter alia in the dependent claims will be clear from the below description.
The invention will now be explained in more detail by reference to the drawings that show presently preferred embodiments thereof.
In operation, laundered spread out cloth pieces L are introduced manually and individually into the shown ironer 1100 at the front end thereof, and advanced from left to right in
In operation, linen sheets L are advanced from an ironer and normally introduced automatically, one after another or alongside each other as shown in
The housing H includes opposite side walls W defining parts of opposite ends of the folder 1, and by proper operation of the folder 1 and/or dimensioning of the distance between the opposite walls W, several linen sheets L may be processed simultaneously by the folder 1, being passed into the folder 1 lying alongside each other on the conveying surface of the first conveyor 10, as shown in
Irrespectively of the folder 1 being set for single-lane operation (such as for operation in unity/in sync of lane1+lane2+lane3+lane4 in
In the following, the direction from the rear side 5 to the front side 6 will be referred to as the first machine direction, coinciding with the direction of linen sheet L movement DM indicated in
Preferably, as shown, the first conveyor 10 is a structural part of the folder 1, with a first conveyor 10 frame 11 being adjustably connected to the housing H at the top portion T thereof, preferably via a hinge allowing some angular adjustment (as shown by the arrows AR in
The general folder 1 height and the first conveyor frame 11 are preferably configured and arranged, respectively, so as to leave a space below the first conveyor frame 11 sufficient to allow a person to stand upright next to the rear side 5, eg. to leave a height P (see
The aforementioned general height P of the folder 1 conveniently allows for a plurality of folded linen piece stacker modules S to be positioned next to each other in the direction between the walls W and generally within the folder 1 housing H at the front side 6, thereby allowing a sorting of the folded linen sheets L into several adjacent stacks without significantly increasing the footprint of the folder 1, as would be the case if the folder F of
As seen best in
A second conveyor loop 20 and a third conveyor loop 25 of the primary conveyor loops likewise extend inside the housing H at levels between the first conveyor loop 15 and the stacker modules S, in the direction between the rear side 5 and the front side 6.
As shown in
The upper run 21 of the second conveyor loop 20 is configured to then receive, carry and convey the linen sheets L in the direction opposite the first machine direction towards the rear side 5 of the folder 1, to a second conveyor loop 20 rear roller 24. A lower run and front roller of the second conveyor loop 20 are designated reference numerals 22 and 23, respectively. For advancing linen sheets L in the directions mentioned above, the two front rollers 18, 23 rotate in opposite directions, the upper roller 18 rotating anticlockwise while the lower roller 23 rotates clockwise.
The two aforementioned front rollers 18, 23 are arranged close to each other, to define a narrow gap G1 between the lower run 17 of the first conveyor loop 15 and the upper run 21 of the second conveyor loop 20. An elongated bar 8 comprising a plurality of high pressure air outlets is located to define a number of individually controllable first folding stations S1 along the length between the opposite walls W of the folder 1, with air discharge nozzles oriented towards the gap G1. A curved pivotable linen sheet L first guide member 9 shaped as the guide member referenced by numeral 50 in
The number of first folding stations S1 provided along the length between the two opposite walls W corresponds to the number of lanes serviced by the folder 1 at a given time, with one first folding station S1 serving each lane. Where either i) a linen sheet L having an exceptionally large size is introduced into the folder 1 such that it spans across more than one lane (see
Normally, in a single-lane mode where a linen sheet L advanced along one lane, the linen sheet L will not arrive at the corresponding first folding station S1 at the same time as another linen sheet advanced alongside in another lane such that there will be no such synchronised operation. Activation of the respective first folding stations S1 for performing a folding will be by controllers receiving for each lane positional and dimensional sensor data for the linen sheets L to be processed, from an array of sensors 7 that may be located at the rear side 5 of the folder 1, such as in the manner shown in
For the first folding station S1, when a linen sheet L is advanced by the upper run 16 its leading edge, normally being a shorter edge thereof, will eventually leave the upper run 16 at the first conveyor loop 15 front roller 18, with a gradually increasing front part of the linen sheet L hanging suspended at the front side 5 of the folder 1 within the housing H. This will be the case where the first guide member 9 is in an inactive, retracted position similar to that of a second guide member 50 shown in
At a given time, normally where slightly more than half of the length of the linen sheet L hangs suspended, an air blast is set to leave the nozzles of bar 8 of the folding station S1, forcing the part of the linen sheet L located immediately between the bar 8 and the gap G1 into the gap G1, thereby generating a first length-wise fold as the linen sheet L is drawn into the gap G1 through contact with the respective moving loops 15, 20. In this manner is the linen sheet L doubled in the way that the trailing edge thereof now overlies the leading edge thereof, the doubled linen sheet L being now carried by the upper run 21 of the second conveyor loop 20.
Where the first guide member 9 has alternatively been moved to an advanced position (similar to the position shown in
During this entire procedure the first and second conveyors loops 15, 20 normally move continuously, at the same constant speed. It is preferred that the lower run 17 contacts the linen sheet L now carried by the upper run 21 for at least some part of the onward movement of the linen sheet L.
Depending on the controllable actions taken at the first folding station S1 the linen sheet L is advanced with or without the leading edge being defined by a first linen fold, towards the second loop 20 rear roller 24 shown in the enlarged view of
The aforementioned third conveyor loop 25 has an upper run 26 configured for carrying the linen sheet L onwards in the first machine direction towards the front side 6 of the folder 1, and extends around a third conveyor loop 25 front roller 28 and a third conveyor loop 25 rear roller 29, with a lower run thereof designated numeral 27. The two rear rollers 24 and 29 are arranged to define a number of individually controllable second folding stations S2 between the opposite walls W, together with an optional respective curved pivotable linen sheet L second guide member 50 driven each by a guide member 50 actuator, a respective pivotable elongated blade 60, respective blade actuators 61, respective blade abutments 62 and a respective bar 70 comprising a plurality of optional high pressure air outlets.
The rear rollers 24, 29 are arranged to define a converging gap G2 between the lower run 22 of the second conveyor loop 20 and the upper run 26 of the third conveyor loop 25, the aforementioned air outlets being configured to provide a blast of air directed towards this gap G2. The resilience of the belt/ribbons 3 forming the second and third conveyor loops 20, 25 allows for folded linen sheets L of different thickness to be received between the lower run 22 and the upper run 26 and to be conveyed onwards, sandwiched between the lower run 21 and the upper run 26. This follows from one or both of the lower/uppers runs 22, 26 yielding upwards/downwards and acting somehow as a spring where the linen sheet L is introduced into the gap G2.
It will be understood that for each first folding station S1 there is a corresponding second folding station S2, the second folding stations S2 being also placed next to each other between the opposite walls W of the folder 1. As is the case for the first folding stations S1 two or more of such second folding stations S2 may be controlled for synchronised operation where a linen sheet L spans across several lanes, such as in lane1+lane2+lane3 mode as shown in
As a linen sheet L leading edge enters a second folding station S2 resting on the second conveyor loop 20 upper run 21, a gradually increasing front part of the linen sheet L will in a first, retracted position of the second guide member 50 shown in
In the retracted first position of the optional second guide member 50 of the second folding station S2, folding of the linen sheet L may be achieved in two ways: by means of the movable blade 60 or by means of an air blast leaving the air outlets of optional bar 70. Using an air blast may by way of example be preferred where the linen sheet L has not previously been folded at the corresponding first folding station S1, in which case folding of the linen sheet L does not require any significant force to drive the linen sheet L into the gap G2. Where, alternatively, the linen sheet L was folded at station S1 the thickness of the folded linen sheet L may provide such a resistance to folding that a stronger force as provided by the moving blade 60 is required to drive the linen sheet L into the gap G2, so as to define a new, further fold line which then forms the leading edge of the folded linen sheet L.
The folding at stations S2 may, depending on the selected movement of the blade 60 be so as to form one or two length-wise folds by the blade 60. For making one fold only at a folding station S2, the blade 60 is turned once, from a retracted position resting against an abutment 62 to an advanced position shown in
While one could in principle use only the blade 60 for performing all length-wise folding operations at folding station S2 it is convenient to allow for the provision of the bar 70 generating for the corresponding second folding station S2 an air blast whenever desired, for the above-mentioned reason, and for instances where the air blast may in fact assist the folding operation carried out by the blade 60.
The aforementioned first, second and third primary conveyor loops 15, 20, 25 define a first part of the folder 1 wherein the belts of the primary conveyor loops 15, 20, 25 normally all advance linen sheets L at the same speed such that a linen sheet L will be advanced at the same speed irrespectively of the lane along which it runs.
A second, downstream part of the folder 1 to be discussed now and seen best in
As shown in
Where the folder 1 is operated in the way that a linen sheet L is introduced into the folder 1 such that it lies across more than one lane, such as centrally on the first conveyor 10, see eg. the lane3+lane4 mode shown in
Located inside each of the fourth conveyor loops 30 along the gap G3 are a pair of opposite rollers 110 driven by integrated drum motors and rotating in opposite directions about an axis parallel with the first machine direction, i.e. parallel with the direction of movement DM of the fourth conveyor loops 30, the nip between the rollers 110 being in the aforementioned gap G3. The elongated blade 100 is configured to move into the gap G3 to a position above the nip, thereby forcing the entire underlying extension in the machine direction of the linen sheet L lying on the upper run 31 of the temporarily halted fourth conveyor loop 30 shown in
An air blast from the sideways oriented air nozzles 115 located below the rollers 110, or any other guide, serves to direct the suspended leading edge of this front part in a sideways direction oriented towards one of the opposite side walls W of the housing H. Rotation of the rollers 110 advance this leading edge towards and onto the upper run 36 of a fifth conveyor loop/second machine direction conveyor loop 35, located below the fourth conveyor loop 30 upper run 31, which fifth conveyor loop 35 is configured to carry and convey the cross-wise folded linen sheet L further in the second machine direction of the folder 1, in the shown embodiment to the left indicated by letters DM, to a succession of further folding stations S4, S5. Use of rollers 110 with integrated drum motors has proven space saving, since no separate roller 110 belt or similar drives need be placed adjacent the front or rear ends 5, 6 of the folder 1. The fifth conveyor loop 35 may be divided into sections along its length, to allow for a controlling such that a cross-wise folded linen sheet L leaving one primary cross-folding station S3 is not discharged on top of another cross-wise folded linen sheet discharged from another primary cross-folding station S3, such as by allowing for a short, temporary buffering by halting movement of such sections of the fifth conveyor loop 35. Alternatively, a delay in the movement of the respective blade 100 of the primary cross-folding stations S3 may be provided for, for the aforementioned purpose.
Stopping the movement of the respective fourth conveyor loop 30 may be when a sensor at the primary cross-wise folding station S3 detects full presence within the primary cross-wise folding station S3 on the upper run 31 of a linen sheet L to be cross-wise folded, or may take place based on the original lane-by-lane detections by sensors 7 and information of the speed of advancement of the respective linen sheets L by the first, second and third conveyor loops 10, 15, 20.
Shown also in
The housing part H2 comprises a number of secondary conveyor loops 40, 45, 50, 55, each including an upper and a lower run and guided and driven by a number of respective left and right rollers. In
The two left rollers 43, 48 are arranged close to each other, to define in a manner similar to folding station S1 a narrow gap G4 between the lower run 42 of the sixth conveyor loop 40 and the upper run 46 of the seventh conveyor loop 45. A pivotable or otherwise movable blade 600 and a blade actuator 610 are located to the left of the left rollers 43, 48.
When a previously cross-wise folded linen sheet L is advanced by the upper run 41 its leading edge will eventually leave the upper run 41 at the sixth conveyor loop 40 left roller 43, with a gradually increasing front part of the linen sheet L hanging suspended in front of gap G4. For making a fold the blade 600 is turned once, from a retracted position to an advanced position where a nose portion 650 thereof extends into the gap G4. This will be the case where the third guide member 900 is in a retracted position (not shown), in principle in the manner discussed above with reference to
Where the third guide member 900 has alternatively been moved to an advanced position the linen sheet L leading edge is simply directed onwards into the gap G4 between the left rollers 43, 48, with no folding taking place.
Shown also schematically in
Where two cross-fold housing parts H2 are used, one at each side wall W, each housing part H2 may deliver folded linen sheets L to a corresponding left or right series of stacker modules S. Stacker modules S may be added to the folder device 1 as required,
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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PA201970051 | Jan 2019 | DK | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2020/051517 | 1/22/2020 | WO | 00 |